Vivaldi:
The Four Seasons; Ailbhe McDonagh: The Irish Four Seasons. Lynda O’Connor, violin; Anamus conducted by David
Brophy. AVIE. $19.99.
Ives:
Piano Sonata No. 1; Three-Page Sonata; Bernhard Gander: Peter Parker. Joonas Ahonen, piano. BIS. $21.99 (SACD).
Kris
Bowers: For a Younger Self; Schoenberg: Chamber Symphony No. 1. Charles Yang, violin; American Youth Symphony
conducted by Carlos Izcaray. Orchid Classics. $16.99.
Music
for Brass and Percussion by Tom Pierson, Milton Babbitt, David Felder, Iannis
Xenakis, Charles Ives, Jon Nelson, Dimas Sedicias, Dámaso Pérez Prado, Giovanni
Gabrieli, and Brian McWhorter (“boiled jar”). Metalofonico conducted by Jon Nelson. New Focus Recordings. $16.99.
It is a longstanding practice in concert design to juxtapose well-known
works that have long since gained audience acceptance with new ones that
listeners have previously heard rarely, if at all. The thinking is that
although people may not wish to pay to listen to music that they may or may not
enjoy, they will be willing to hear something new if they get to experience the
tried-and-true at the same concert. This program design can be quite carefully
managed – for instance, placing a known piece first, a new one second, then
having intermission, and then offering another familiar work for the concert’s
second half. The idea is that even people uninterested in the new material will
probably show up for the first half of the concert to experience the work they
already know and enjoy, and are unlikely to walk out on the new piece when the
event’s second half is still to come. If the little-known or unknown work fits
in some way with whatever is well-known, this approach can be quite effective,
providing insights into similar or contrasting handling of musical material and
hopefully giving the new music a chance to be heard more than once (it is
notoriously difficult for new works to receive a second concert performance).
This approach to live concerts has been less common when it comes to
recordings, but in recent years has gained increasing acceptance in the
recorded-music field as well. How well it works continues to depend on the
skill with which disparate works are put together for presentation on the same
CD (although the matter is more complex with regard to digital-only releases,
which make it super-simple for people to skip a work they do not know or wish
to experience). One of the earliest and most-effective recorded juxtapositions
has been that of Vivaldi’s ever-popular The
Four Seasons with Ástor Piazzolla’s Cuatro
Estaciones Porteñas (“The Four Seasons of Buenos Aires,” the “port city” –
hence the work’s title). Piazzolla’s work was actually conceived as four
different pieces, one dating to 1965 and three to 1969, and it was not until
Russian film composer Leonid Desyatnikov cleverly rearranged and fine-tuned the
four from 1996 to 1998, increasing their parallels to Vivaldi’s concertos, that
Piazzolla’s music began its ascent to the popularity it enjoys today. Recorded
pairings of the Vivaldi and Piazzolla works are no longer surprising at all –
and a new AVIE release seeks the same sort of prominence-through-juxtaposition
for the world première of The Irish Four
Seasons by Ailbhe McDonagh (born 1982). McDonagh’s parallels with Vivaldi
are quite deliberate: her movement sequence of Spring/Summer/Autumn/Winter is
the same as Vivaldi’s (Piazzolla’s begins with Summer), and she specifically
looks for Irish-inflected material inspired by Vivaldi’s music. The four movements
of the new work are Earrach (Spring), Samhradh (Summer), Fómhar (Autumn), and Geimhreadh (Winter). Unlike
Vivaldi’s set of four three-movement concertos (actually Nos. 1-4 of his Op. 8,
Il cimento dell' armonia e dell'
inventione), McDonagh’s work consists of four single
movements: Spring is surprisingly gentle and lyrical, lacking the get-up-and-go
usually associated with the season of growth after chill; Summer is
considerably more Vivaldi-ish both thematically and in its effervescence;
Autumn has a pleasantly dancelike quality that does reflect Vivaldi, but with a
particularly distinct Irish accent; and Winter, whose opening stasis directly parallels
Vivaldi’s handling of the same season, later returns to the lyricism of Spring
before concluding in a very speedy 40-second burst of intensity and enthusiasm.
The Irish Four Seasons proves to be a
pleasant, comparatively unassuming work, well-crafted and neatly paying tribute
to Vivaldi while asserting its own national origin to rather good effect. It deserves
further hearings but will probably do best when juxtaposed, as on this
recording, with the Vivaldi original. Lynda O’Connor plays the McDonagh
stylishly and with enthusiasm, nicely accompanied by a string ensemble that she
formed herself and that bears the rather odd name of Anamus (which sounds
exactly like “animus,” that surely not being the intent of the moniker). It
should not be construed as churlish to note that O’Connor’s and Anamus’
handling of Vivaldi’s original set of concertos is even better than what they
offer in the McDonagh piece: sensitive, filled with elegant touches (from the
clarity of individual notes to the many instances of well-thought-out
ornamentation), and emotive without being inappropriately Romantic in sound or
pacing. It is, in fact, a splendid performance that makes this disc well worth
owning for the Vivaldi alone – thus increasing the chance that the McDonagh
work will be heard more frequently, which appears to be the whole point.
A fascinating BIS recording featuring
Finnish pianist Joonas Ahonen partakes in an unusual way of a form of
juxtaposition known among television producers as the “hammock.” This involves
scheduling two well-known, popular 30-minute programs, typically so-called
“situation comedies,” with a separation of 30 minutes between them – and using
the middle 30 minutes for a new, untried show. The idea is that people will
tune in to watch the first popular program and stay put for the second, being
introduced to the new material out of a kind of laziness – that is, an
unwillingness to switch to some other channel for a relatively brief 30-minute
period. Less common today than in the days when there were fewer available TV
channels and programs, the “hammock” concept still survives in some circumstances,
and is used cleverly in the Ahonen disc. Here the composer provides the “hammock” effect even though the specific works do not, since neither Ives’ Piano Sonata No. 1 nor his Three-Page Sonata can be thought of as
highly popular and well-known – certainly not by comparison with the “Concord”
sonata. Nevertheless, Ives himself is a known quantity and an endlessly
fascinating one, so listeners predisposed to hear his music and experience some
of it that is less frequently performed will presumably be sufficiently
attracted to this disc to stay put for Peter
Parker by Bernhard Gander (born 1969). As it turns out, the recording is a
thoroughgoing success: Ahonen appears to have no difficulty with the considerable
complexity of these Ives sonatas – which are almost on par with the technical
enormity of the “Concord” – and seems to have a genuinely good time putting
across Gander’s very contemporary work, which dates to 2004 and is a kind of
Impressionistic and pianistically up-to-date presentation of the comings and
goings of comic-book hero Spider-Man and his alter ego, whose name the work
bears. Anyone who does not know the Marvel Comics icon will have difficulty
figuring out what all the swoops and zips and full-keyboard antics and note
clusters and arpeggios and odd pauses are supposed to refer to, and even
listeners who do know the Spider-Man
milieu may be hard-pressed to figure out all the referents. But anyone
intrigued by up-to-the-minute piano compositions and performances will find Peter Parker an exhilarating experience
and Ahonen’s playing completely engaging. Gander’s work, though, takes up just
11 of the disc’s 61 minutes – and thankfully, the focus on Ives is every bit as
involving and impressive as is the handling of Peter Parker. Indeed, Ahonen’s playing is so good and these two
Ives sonatas are so involved and involving that it is hard to understand why
the works are not heard more frequently – except perhaps for their formidable
technical difficulties, which Ahonen surmounts with apparent effortlessness. Piano Sonata No. 1 proves to have almost
the same expansive scale as the “Concord,” and offers a fascinating object
lesson in Ives’ penchant for interweaving hymn tunes and their straightforward
harmonies into movements that are rhythmically complex, often highly dissonant,
and bordering on atonality (and at times crossing the border). Some of the
hymns that recur almost throughout the sonata remain quite well-known today,
notably Bringing In the Sheaves.
Others are less familiar, and in one case will bring today’s listeners some
inappropriate and unintended bursts of humor: O Happy Day is now more widely known as the humorous drinking song How Dry I Am. Ahonen nevertheless plays
all the music forthrightly, as Ives intended, and the result is a first-rate
performance of a large-scale and highly impressive sonata whose neglect is
demonstrably unfair. Ahonen also does a fine job with the Three-Page Sonata, so called because it was written by Ives on,
yes, three pages. Small-scale but scarcely simple, the work – like the
“Concord” – has an optional part for an instrument other than the piano, in
this case the celesta, which Ahonen uses to good effect. Ives’ usual complexity
shows here through material that ranges from a statement of the notes making up
the name BACH to the use of the so-called Westminster chimes that sound not
only in England but also in innumerable clocks in the United States. This is,
in totality, a remarkably effective and interesting recording that shows just
how winning a combination of material from very different musical time periods
can be when thoughtfully presented.
The juxtaposition of works on a
new Orchid Classics CD featuring the American
Youth Symphony under Carlos Izcaray is less obvious and more rarefied. A
more-appropriate pairing of a work with For
a Younger Self by Kris Bowers (born 1989) would have been something like
Richard Strauss’ Ein Heldenleben.
This is not to say that Bowers’ modest symphonic piece shares Strauss’
grandiosity or that this orchestra would necessarily be a good one to handle
the Strauss – but in terms of the programmatic intent of Bowers, there is more
in common with Strauss than with Schoenberg’s Chamber Symphony No. 1. Bowers composes for films and TV, and he
brings some of the sensibility honed in those media to For a Younger Self, which is conceived as a journey of
self-exploration by a protagonist represented by solo violinist Charles Yang.
The three-movement work is not quite a symphony, not quite a violin concerto.
From the start, it dips into and out of contrasting musical and emotional
spaces: Bowers presses ahead with driving, usually dissonant and
percussion-heavy sections that he alternates with more-lyrical, more-emotional
material seated firmly in the expressive mode of films – which is to say that
these sections tug at the heartstrings in thoroughly predictable ways. The
entire second movement, marked Larghetto
(Gently), swoons and pleads in its extended solo passages, then evokes
quicksilver emotional changes (accentuated by brass outbursts) for purposes of
contrast. It sounds quite fine – Bowers certainly knows how to write for an
orchestra – but is emotionally obvious (those harp arpeggios!) and vapid. The
brief finale is filled with a kind of perpetuum
mobile fiddle playing that produces a feeling of bounce and brightness, accentuated
by snare drum and cymbal emphases that add to the impression of rushing toward
an upbeat conclusion that indeed arrives quickly and with a final speed-up. For a Younger Self is fun to hear in
many ways, but it is entirely a surface-level work that sounds as if it could
be a warm-up for Bowers to enter the concert-hall field in the future – on its
own, it really does not have much to say. And it does not meld particularly
well with Schoenberg’s Chamber Symphony
No. 1 (1906), originally written for 15 instruments and heard here in a
1935 arrangement for full orchestra. This is early Schoenberg (his Op.9), best
known for its extensive use of quartal harmony (built on perfect fourths); it
is a one-movement work in five distinct sections. The structural care,
well-considered use of dissonance, and effective contrasts among the work’s segments
keep it engaging throughout – if not always “easy” for listeners, even a
century-plus after its composition. The complexity underlying the Schoenberg
serves to highlight the comparatively simplistic approach of Bowers’ piece –
and while the Schoenberg is played very well indeed, it is not really enough by
itself to justify owning a (+++) CD on which it is offered as the secondary
piece. For what it is worth, the disc is a short one – 48 minutes – and would
have had room for Ein Heldenleben
rather than the Schoenberg if those involved in the project had been thinking
in that direction.
An even more extreme assemblage of material from very different eras –
consisting of compositions written during a period of more than 400 years –
appears on a New Focus Recordings release featuring trumpeter Jon Nelson (born
1956) and an ensemble that includes brass, percussion and electric guitar. And
if that sounds like a thoroughly weird instrumental combination for a work by
Giovanni Gabrieli (1558-1613) – well, it is. Yet the arrangement by Louis
Hanzlik of Gabrieli’s Canzona No. 25
is actually respectful and quite effective as heard here – a pleasant surprise
indeed. From the Steeples and the
Mountains by Charles Ives (1874-1954) does not come across quite as well,
but Fanfare for Double Brass Sextet
by Milton Babbitt (1916-2011) is very well-played indeed, although musically
not fully convincing. The longest work on the CD is Music for a Solemn Occasion by Tom Pierson (born 1954), a work
written for a wedding rather than anything funereal – this is a piece whose
highly dissonant opening chords lead to an extended exploration of sonorities
rather than a focus on emotional depth. In all, there are 13 works here, two of
them by Brazilian composer Dimas Sedicias (1930-2002): Raymond My Friend, for tuba solo and notable for the extreme low
notes with which it opens; and Metalofonico,
which starts with a shrill whistle and immediately becomes a riotous
proclamation of dance music (the CD concludes with a third Sedicias item, Tuba Out Take). One other composer is
heard more than once: David Felder (born 1953), whose Incendio (an arrangement of a work originally for chamber choir)
progresses gently at first, then becomes strongly chordal; and Shredder, a more-dramatic work built
over timpani. Also on the CD are Khal
Perr by Iannis Xenakis (1922-2001), a work of complex and constantly
shifting soundscapes; the very bright and thoroughly engaging Mambo #5 (arranged for winds by Nelson)
by Dámaso Pérez Prado (1916-1989); Nelson’s own Insomnio, built on the sounds of a drum set and featuring strong
contrasts between outgoing and quiet material; and Lucre Iota by Brian McWhorter (born 1975) writing as “boiled jar” –
this being a self-consciously avant-garde work that uses mechanistic
raucousness to establish its bona fides
with audiences inclined to present themselves as an “in” crowd. To the extent
that anything ties together this disparate material, it is the skillful playing
of Nelson and his ensemble: the CD is certainly attractive from an aural
perspective for those who fancy brass combinations and recombinations. But this
(+++) mixed bag of a disc, despite being likely to appeal to enthusiasts for
brass music, is not particularly effective in blending and contrasting works
from very different time periods, written in very different styles, by
composers of widely varying predilections. It will likely be most attractive to
brass and percussion players who can appreciate the nuances of the scoring and
arrangements of the various pieces, and can imagine themselves as part of the
ensemble delivering these enthusiastic renditions of highly varied material.